Break-in for new P95


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woolfam
June 17, 2003, 09:39 AM
Hey - been hanging out here a while, lots of great info, thanks! I am getting a new P95 - first 9mm - first Ruger semi-auto. Any suggestions for breaking it in? Initial cleaning? Things to look for?

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Tamara
June 17, 2003, 09:44 AM
A Ruger?

Load it and shoot it. :cool:

ojibweindian
June 17, 2003, 10:00 AM
Steps for breaking in a P-95

1. Grab a few boxes of WWB at Wally World.
2. Load your mags.
3. Send lead down range.

I had a P-95 and never experienced any problems in over several thousand rounds of everything I could get my hands on. Never "broke it in" because it didn't need "breaking in".

grenadier
June 17, 2003, 10:21 AM
Although I think Rugers are oversized, overweight, blocky, bulky, non-ergonomic pistols, I have yet to find a P-series gun that needed "breaking in." Ruger P-series pistols have some of the best "out of the box" reliability I've ever seen.

DAT
June 17, 2003, 12:21 PM
I have a P95 and love it. If it is a new gun, take it apart and clean it before you shoot it. Ruger ships those things out with lots of greasy lubricant. Then load, shoot, and repeat.

Enjoy,
DAT

Bren
June 17, 2003, 12:38 PM
Always clean and lube a new gun unless the instructions say not to (for break in). Most guns come in a packing/machining oil that is not lube and you want a clean barrel.

I had a P-95 and it was flawless from day one. Enjoy! Bren

RON in PA
June 17, 2003, 01:29 PM
What the others have said. Expect the gun to smooth-up some in the trigger department as you put rounds through it. Feel free to dry fire the snot out of it.

KP95DAO
June 17, 2003, 01:48 PM
Do not get strong solvents (brake cleaner, B-12 Chem tool, etc) on the frame. You may want to add skateboard tape to the front and or rear of the grip.

grenadier
June 17, 2003, 02:15 PM
Basically, don't use anything that you wouldn't use on polyurethane, which is what the P95 and P97 frames are using. It's tough stuff, but there are some solvents that will affect it.

xjer
June 17, 2003, 03:50 PM
You might want to pick up a Hogue grip sleeve. The stock grip
is to slick for me. The Hogue is a little hard to get on but worth
it.

Mike

cslinger
June 17, 2003, 03:59 PM
What everybody else said. Lots of dry fire or actual fire will smooth up the trigger very nicely. I have a P97 that has a very nice trigger after a few thousand rounds.

Chris

denfoote
June 17, 2003, 05:23 PM
I have yet to find a P-series gun that needed "breaking in."

My P97 seems to have needed about 250 rounds to settle down to point of aim, but it's all right now!! :D

Ky Larry
June 17, 2003, 06:15 PM
For P95 break in : 1 Clean
2 Shoot
3 Go to step 1
Many people bad mouth Ruger autos because they are butt-ugly, big, and clunky-looking but they you don't hear much criticism about their accuracy or reliablity. Shot my CCW qualification with a P95. I put 19 shots in the x ring and put the last 2 rounds where the eye's would be on the target. (I'm not really a very good shot.) Enjoy!!
:)

JeepDriver
June 17, 2003, 06:37 PM
The P95 was my first hand gun as well. It has out shot anything else I own.

First thing you should do is buy a Hogue Hand All and 6 or the USA 15 round mags from CDNN (http://cdnninvestments.com/rugp89mm15st.html) and some +5% springs from Wolff (http://www.gunsprings.com/1ndex.html) and some followers from Ruger (http://www.ruger-firearms.com/Firearms/SE-Prescott.html). It may sound like a lot of calling around but I have 6 USA mag bodies with Wolff springs and Ruger followers for much less then buying factory 15 rounders. And they have been 100% reliable.


http://www.fototime.com/AD6FF66F572364C/standard.jpg

woolfam
June 18, 2003, 01:35 PM
Thank you, all, for your good suggestions. With the $40 rebate and deals for as low as $280 on the auction sites, it seemed like a no-brainer.

makdaddy03
June 18, 2003, 03:26 PM
Tamara said it all. ;)

George Hill
June 18, 2003, 04:08 PM
Breaking it in? A Ruger Auto?

I'd suggest using large cinder blocks or sledge hammers.

seeker_two
June 18, 2003, 10:35 PM
You don't break a Ruger in. It breaks YOU in.

Just shoot the darn thing...:D

TheFrontRange
June 18, 2003, 11:14 PM
Well, you hardly need more encouragement at this point...

...but I had a nice little P95DC back in '97-'99 that was just absolutely reliable and very accurate. I carried it during a brief stint as a Reserve Deputy...was one of a VERY few guys carrying a Ruger anything, but I did manage to qualify with second-highest score in my unit at the department's range with the P95. She was a beauty!!!

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